Using arrays of objects with embedded IDs is preferred for new APIs over
using entity IDs as JSON keys. This commit changes the SLM stats API to
use the preferred format.
Although they do not support eager_global_ordinals, ip fields use global
ordinals for certain aggregations like 'terms'.
This commit also corrects a reference to the sampler aggregation.
Previously, queries on the _index field were not able to specify index aliases.
This was a regression in functionality compared to the 'indices' query that was
deprecated and removed in 6.0.
Now queries on _index can specify an alias, which is resolved to the concrete
index names when we check whether an index matches. To match a remote shard
target, the pattern needs to be of the form 'cluster:index' to match the
fully-qualified index name. Index aliases can be specified in the following query
types: term, terms, prefix, and wildcard.
This commit changes the GET REST api so it will accept an optional comma
separated list of enrich policy ids. This change also modifies the
behavior of the GET API in that it will not error if it is passed a bad
enrich id anymore, but will instead just return an empty list.
This commit adds the ability to require an ingest pipeline on an
index. Today we can have a default pipeline, but that could be
overridden by a request pipeline parameter. This commit introduces a new
index setting index.required_pipeline that acts similarly to
index.default_pipeline, except that it can not be overridden by a
request pipeline parameter. Additionally, a default pipeline and a
request pipeline can not both be set. The required pipeline can be set
to _none to ensure that no pipeline ever runs for index requests on that
index.
We should only snapshot the index we're going to
restore in the next step. Otherwise, we will
potentially not get the correct response or
fail restoring outright due to internal indices
getting created concurrently when running against
the x-pack distribution.
Closes#46844
* [DOCS] Adds regression analytics resources and examples to the data frame analytics APIs.
Co-Authored-By: Benjamin Trent <ben.w.trent@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Tom Veasey <tveasey@users.noreply.github.com>
Previously, cross-cluster replication (CCR) documentation was located in
the Stack Overview:
https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elastic-stack-overview/master/xpack-ccr.html
This adds CCR documentation to the Elasticsearch Reference Guide with a
level offset for headings.
The level offset and CCR Stack Overview docs will be removed in later
commits.